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The Sun, 1962-12-12

1962-12-12-001

THE AMERICAN WAY j
j^itttenV^mrttftsrtnm, m tjl
Tht jood, the pure, the tcmfifuf. 'fl
From graven stone and written scroll, Jr
from the old flower-fields of the/ Q "jji
And, weary seekers for the bes,, ^0
We ■'■' ' ' ' ' ' C>-
fs*i came back loden from ourrjucs^b/sSr. ' Jj .'-V ""' v :'A
To find 1har all the sages said . *Jj>?«5, %#> $t&. .■'.'.' W',.'■
I* in the. Book our ntntht-rs read.* Yl'• t/^it?. 1'; i" 'vui_/* !. .
, . rBr^hrr^^r
^tiiAA-l
Vol. 37 —No. 12
3 Sections — 16 Pages
NORTH CANTON, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER. 12, 1S62
lOe Per Oopy
Citizens NC Branch Has Grand Opening After Remodeling
'■■IM',.\
Public Invited for Inspection
Souvenirs, Meet Celebrities
Wy
iAr-MVf.sii
.': .'.Wii. „
;*.X
* J0JJM
I f. _ QUAKER POET (iao7-l852) , mt»■ ™ .".t'.^wirrTtn <t>
THe Book Our Mothers Read—the Bible
The Soggy Sixties
Fellow Americans generally will agree with President
Kennedy's head economic advisor, Walter W. Heller, that
the business of tlie nation is suffering from "tired blood"
— with his surprising' admission that what were to be the
"soaring sixties" have goi^e "somewhat soggy" — and his
conclusion that a ba?.ia and very considerable tax cut is
vitally needed to ease the "drag" oh the nation's economy.
This was Mv. Heller's theme as opening speaker at a
Washington conference :0,n fiscal and monetary policy in
which Administration leaders said they were seeking the
advice of 150 representatives of labor, business and the
professions,
"To removo the dual tax drag on the economy," said
Mr. ifeller, "loth the drag on markets and the drag on incentives — is a central concern of today's economic policy
in the Kennedy Administration."
There is no concern, however, over record-breaking
Government expenditures that have turned what wa.s to
have been a half billion dollar surplus, into a deficit for
this fiscal year that is expected to amount to $7.8 billion
— and which will be higher next year!
Thus, while we get the impression that the 150 were
invited, to provide an audience rather than to offer advice,
the need for tax reform and tax reduction that will provide incentive and allow accumulation oi' investment capital
is as urgent as that for reform in Government extravagance.
There could be no more shocking evidence of this than
the report of The Wall Street Journal, as the conference
opened, on the flood of foreign money that is now being
poured into real estate — both land and buildings —■ in
the United States.
Ironically,-a-30rstcry office building is soon to rise
on the dock site from which tax-sore colonists shoved off
on the Boston Tea Party, says the paper. It notes that
British investors own half of the 59-story Pan Am Building-that rises over the tracks at New York's Grand Central
Terminal, and that the Italian Societa Generale Immobi-
liare, partly owned by the Vatican, will spend $50 million
on a hotel, apartment and office building center in Washington, D.C. On New York's Staten Island Swiss bankers
outbid Arrie'rickns, paying $15 million for undeveloped land!
The Journal tftiotes an authority as saying foreign
investment in the United States land alone has increased
1,000 per cent in the past five years
It would seem high time for a WASHINGTON Tea
Party!
A Bill Of Duties
Saturday will be Open House all day at the North
Canton branch of Citizens Savings and Loan Assn. The
grand opening climaxes a remodelingjaitid'expansion program, and makes North Canton the-second city in the
country to have a bank with the new Diebold television
drive-up.
order to maintain and fulfill the Bill of Rights, we needed
to develop a Bill of Duties.
Duty is an oldfashioned Avord — but all the modern
sophistries will not wipe it out. This country greAv up on
copy book sayings, and it readied its heights under men
who had had thoroughly dinned into them'the plain homely
virtues of loyalty, honesty and integrity, and who personally applied them to their community life.
We have vt-andered far-from, these copy hook sayings,
and have accepted out-rights as special- privileges for which
no payment was necessary. We must-go back to the Proverbs, to the simple statement of right and wrong.
"Righteousness exatteth a nation; but sin is a reproach
to any people."
"He that justificth the wicked and he that eondemneth
the just, even they both are an abomination to the Lord."
"Train up a child in the. way he should go; and when
he is old, he will not depart from it."
"Buy the truth and. sell it not; get Avisdom and instruction and understanding."
"He that hath no rule over his spirit is like a cit.v that
is broken down and Avithout Avails."
"Th'ey that forsake the law, praise the wicked, but
such as keep the laAv contend with them."
Only by setting up a Bill of Duties for ourselves can
Ave observe the spirit as Avell as the letter of the Bill of
Rights.
Hoav well do you know this charter of our liberties?
Read it over carefully and turn its clauses into inverse
ratio. Free press — free to speak the truth but not free
to make false statements. Free assembly — for free and
friendly discussion, but not to be used to overthroAV the
government. Freedom to worship — but not to keep anyone else from worshipping. And so on. Each freedom that
is given, carries Avith it its duty or restriction as it affects
each man's conduct toward his neighbor.
If we Avill but adhere conscientiously to a Bill of Duties, we need have no fear of retaining the benefits of our
Bill of Rights.
One of the high spots of the
(lay will be tho visit of Captain Penny, WIvVVS television
personality, who will autograph
saving hooks from 1 to 3 p.m.
Glyn Warstler, North Canton's
"'Miss Ohio" in lhc "Miss Universe" eonlesl, will be the honorary rc.-eiilioni.st.
Also on hand will be the entire branch .staff that has continued to serve Vorth Canlon
customers throughout tlie
months of remodolirg, including
Carl DiRienzi, branch manager.
Mayor George VV. Swindell and
other City officials also will be
present.
All persons Touring the bank
facilities br-r.vosn 9 a.m. and
3 p.m. Rnumi.Tv will receive free
souvenir giftf
For 'those adding .S5 or morn
to a savini...; account, or opening a new account for that
amount, Citizens ha? a free ticket to Wait Dir.neye jafest motion picture production, "Tn
Search of the'Castaways." slated
to open at the Palace Theater
in Canlon, Dec. 21.
Special features of tlie newly
renovated interior, in addition
to the office television, include
a suspended acoustic liie ceiling, new flooring, new teller's
counter antl three new coupon
booths for use in connection with
the safety deposit vault.
The colonial columns and
white woo;i trim have remained in front, but the front has
been- opened up with glass so
that the main banking room is
visible from the North Canton
.square. Additional white wood
division bars are -being added
as soon as' weather permits.
There is a new rear entrance
from the rear parking lot. with
a canopy which protects the
night depository.
Twenty-one cars can park in
the lot immediately behind the
diamond-shaped building, while
parking for an additional 19
cars has been provided through
construction of a second lot at
the northwest corner of 'Portage
ard Ream streets. Along with
this project, 13 1-2 feet parallel
along 'Ream St. was dedicated
to the City for widening of the
street.
Both lots are available, in off
hours, for City Hall visitors and
the general public. Concrete
curbs have been installed in both
lots for .safety and landscaped
planting strips and boxes add
a touch of green.
(Continued on Psge 3)
Service Keeps
Gsiy lowing
-Vorth Canton residents will
need a long time to thank City
officials and .street and-.water
department employes for the excellent job of snow removal during last weekend's storm. ',
Those who were able to make
it to 'North Canton on snow
laden, slippery highways, wanted io stay here, .where they
couid move about, freely—on
foot and by motor vehicle.
CrP\\-\ were first •cdle.rl out
at 7:52 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5
to alleviate slippery conditions
on the main arteries. -
At, 2 p.m., Dec. 0, The men
were out ajain—this lime io
haul away tree limbs which had
been broken by the unusually
heavy snowfall. Many l'imbs, in
their fall, blocked passage on-
main thoroughfares.
Dedicated men plowed through
mounds of snow all day Friday
ancl until supperlime Saturday,
and then had to be called out
again to haul 17 loads of snow
(Continued on Page 3)
.fia.Tij.tulO All k3X'IL JLffi. A
gives indirect lighting to the
at Citizens Savings and Loan
suspended acoustical c.eiiing
ultra-modern tellers counter
'branch on the North. Canton
Music Will Fill The Air
As Community Sings
program
The public is being in*7iL"'.l to join with school and
church choirs in a community-wide Christmas
Thursday, Dec. 20.
A North Canton Civil Defense spokesman reports a disappointing response to its Neighborhood First Aid Training
Pilot Project.
The Community Christmas
Sing, sponsored by the Hoover
Company, will be at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday around the community
Christmas tree on the Hoover
Company lawn in downtown
North Canton.
Radio Station WHBC will
broadcast the entire one-half
hour program at 7:30.
Those who wish to participate
in the program should be on
hand by 7 so that the broadcast
(Continued on Page 3)
Come See Santa
A Note of Thanks
North Canton residents were the envy of all their
neighbors during the big snow storm last weekend, not
because an invisible woof shielded the City from the snow
fall, but because around-the-clock hard work of a few men,
namely employes of the City's street and water departments and the City administration. Let's give them a smile
.and a 'Thank You' to warm their-hearts as they labor in
ihe cold in our behalf.
K of G Council 3777
Plans Christmas Party
The annual Christmas Party
of Bishop McFadden Council
3777, North Canton Knights of
Columbus, will be held Dec. 16,
at St. Paul's church hall.
Entertainment for the afternoon event will be provided toy
members of the Canton Youth
Council dance classes and the
Canton Talent Foundation.
Santa also will be present. A
Community Sing will be led 'by
Max'Prosise, chairman. Refreshments will be served.
Shop at Bazaar
Many North Canton res-
dents will be able to complete their Christmas Shopping, a week early, . this
weekend at the two-day
annual Christmas Bazaar
held by the Senior Cit-
zens.
Handcrafted gift items,
baked goods and other
novelty articles will be on
sale Friday and Saturday
at the North Canton Community Building YMCA on
S. Main St.
Doors will open at 9 a.m.
both days. Sales personnel
will remain on duty in the
CB lobby until 9 Friday
night and until '5 p.m. Saturday.
Purchasers imay treat
themselves to hot coffee
and doughnuts along with
their shopping spree.
The bazaar is one of
the major money-making
events conducted by North
Canton's Senior Citizens
organization.
Judges Are Named For
Home Lighting Cmtest
Time is drawing' short for entering the North Canton
Junior Chamber of Commerce annual Christmas Home
Lighting Contest. The deadline for entries is midnight,
Dec. 17. Judging will take place Sunday evening, Dec. 23.
Santa gives a friendly wave to Sharon Blanc as she
adjusts the Santa Sponsor sign on the Stipes Footwear door.
Stipes is one of 36 Santa Sponsors, responsible for St. Nick's
trip to North Can'ton this year. Sponsors include business-
, men, professional people and other civic-minded individuals.
Santa and his igloo will have headquarters at Hummel's
parking lot on N. Main St. through 'Saturday Of this week.
All next week and on Dec. 24, the jolly "gent" and his'ice
house will hold forth in front o'f the Harter Bank on S. Main
St.
Santa greets children and hands out candy canes from
6:30 to 8:30 weekdays and from noon until 5:30 p.m. Satur-
days. • .
Added to last week's list of 32 sponsors are-Topps .Chalet.
Restaurant arid Lounge, The Pepper Tree,'Sturm's-Appliance Service and Harry London Candies, Inc.
All residents of the North Canton School District are eligible
to compete. Entry Blanks are
available at North Canton and
Greentown business places as
well as those printed in the
North Canton Sun.
Contest chairman John E'bin-
ger has announced that the
judges will be Mrs. William
Hoag of The Jewelry Box, Mr.
Robert Zimmerman of The
North Canton Floral & 'Gift
Shoppe, and Mr. Robert Rainey
of the North Canton Little Art
Gallery.
Entries will be judged on the
basis of design and composition,
originality, color and theme.
Cash awards of $35, donated toy
the Ohio Power Company, $20,
and $10 will be presenter to the
first, second, and third place
winners respectively. In addition, an 8 x 10 color photograph of the winner's display
will accompany each cash prize.
Watch for List
The Dec. 19 Christmas issue
of the North Canton Sun will
contain a list of entries to enable the community to view
and appreciate the holiday decorating efforts of the entrants.
The 1961 contest first prize
winner was Marlin- E,. Snyder
of 812 Clearmount with second
and third place awards going
to James-McEiwen of-720Q-Cha-
tham and Carroll Gantz of 1030
Dogwood, respectively.
The committee members serving with John Ebirger are Ned
Lehman, Dan Gray, and Gary
Storch with Don Hinerman as
group advisor.
tsquare. Tne newly-remodeled interior will be open for inspection all day Saturday. Of special interest will be the
television units, inside and out.
City Hall Buzzes With
Pre - Holiday Wrap - Up
City Hall is going to be
Dec. 17. So far five meetings
evening.
The first two, at 6:30 and 7,
are public hearings on two zoning change requests.
Two recessed meetings, picking up from where they were
left off earlier this month, will
be City Council at 8 p.m. and
the North Canton Planning Commission at 7:30.
Also meeting the same eve-
a busy place come Monday,
are slated for that Monday
ning at 7:30 will be the newly-
established Mayor's Advisory
Committee on City Planning.
The fir.st public hearing wiU
be on a request to change zoning of Lot 3937 on Schneider
Rd. from Residential Area II
Class B Use to Business Area
III Class A.
The second hearing deals with
(".Continued on Page 3)
Christmas Oratorio
Walsh Students
Head for Home
After the completion of classes 'Friday, Walsh College's 301
students will begin a 20-day vacation- for the holidays.
Classes at the E!aston St. Liberal arts college will resume
Jan. 3. Less than three weeks
later, first-semester final examinations will be given Jan. 23-25.
^Freshmen will register Jan.
31 for second-semester classes.
Sophomores and juniors register
Feb. 1.
Second-semester classes will
begin 'Feb. 4.
Jackson PTA To Meet
Grades one through three will
present a play for the December meeting of the Jackson
Parent-Techer Assn.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will
be held Dec. 20 in. the grade
school auditorium.
Five vocal sonsts wil be featured in Camille Saint Saens'
"Christmas Oratorio" to be presented Sunday, Dec. 16, by the
Chancel Choir of Zion United
Church of Christ.
The program will be given at
the church at 8 p.m. and will
be open to the public.
Solo roles will be taken by
Mrs. Donald Wensel, soprano;
Mrs. Richard Cochran; mezzo
Gilpatric, alto; H. Jay Bishop,
tenor; and Richard 'Ramsey, baritone.
Harpist will be Mrs. Charles
Henschen. Charles McAnall will
provide organ accompaniement.
Conducting the choral group
will be Miss Daune Gillespie,
minister of music.
Of the many works by the
French composer, this oratorio
is one of the few well known.
"Carnival of Animals" and
'Danse Macabre" are among
his other popular compositons.
The "Christmas Oratorio,"
Opus 12. is one of Saint Saens*
HS35-19211 early works, having
been written in 1858, while the
composer .served as organist at
the Church of the Madeline,
'Paris.
The text of the oratorio, originally written in Latin, is hased!
on the Versicles of the Office
of the Day and the Midnight
(Christmas) Mass of the Roman Catholic Church. The choir
will perform an- English ver-
sion by the American poet, Nathan Dole.
Written in a pastoral style,
the oratorio tells of Christ's
birth and foreshadows the Con>
ing tragedy.,

THE AMERICAN WAY j
j^itttenV^mrttftsrtnm, m tjl
Tht jood, the pure, the tcmfifuf. 'fl
From graven stone and written scroll, Jr
from the old flower-fields of the/ Q "jji
And, weary seekers for the bes,, ^0
We ■'■' ' ' ' ' ' C>-
fs*i came back loden from ourrjucs^b/sSr. ' Jj .'-V ""' v :'A
To find 1har all the sages said . *Jj>?«5, %#> $t&. .■'.'.' W',.'■
I* in the. Book our ntntht-rs read.* Yl'• t/^it?. 1'; i" 'vui_/* !. .
, . rBr^hrr^^r
^tiiAA-l
Vol. 37 —No. 12
3 Sections — 16 Pages
NORTH CANTON, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER. 12, 1S62
lOe Per Oopy
Citizens NC Branch Has Grand Opening After Remodeling
'■■IM',.\
Public Invited for Inspection
Souvenirs, Meet Celebrities
Wy
iAr-MVf.sii
.': .'.Wii. „
;*.X
* J0JJM
I f. _ QUAKER POET (iao7-l852) , mt»■ ™ .".t'.^wirrTtn
THe Book Our Mothers Read—the Bible
The Soggy Sixties
Fellow Americans generally will agree with President
Kennedy's head economic advisor, Walter W. Heller, that
the business of tlie nation is suffering from "tired blood"
— with his surprising' admission that what were to be the
"soaring sixties" have goi^e "somewhat soggy" — and his
conclusion that a ba?.ia and very considerable tax cut is
vitally needed to ease the "drag" oh the nation's economy.
This was Mv. Heller's theme as opening speaker at a
Washington conference :0,n fiscal and monetary policy in
which Administration leaders said they were seeking the
advice of 150 representatives of labor, business and the
professions,
"To removo the dual tax drag on the economy," said
Mr. ifeller, "loth the drag on markets and the drag on incentives — is a central concern of today's economic policy
in the Kennedy Administration."
There is no concern, however, over record-breaking
Government expenditures that have turned what wa.s to
have been a half billion dollar surplus, into a deficit for
this fiscal year that is expected to amount to $7.8 billion
— and which will be higher next year!
Thus, while we get the impression that the 150 were
invited, to provide an audience rather than to offer advice,
the need for tax reform and tax reduction that will provide incentive and allow accumulation oi' investment capital
is as urgent as that for reform in Government extravagance.
There could be no more shocking evidence of this than
the report of The Wall Street Journal, as the conference
opened, on the flood of foreign money that is now being
poured into real estate — both land and buildings —■ in
the United States.
Ironically,-a-30rstcry office building is soon to rise
on the dock site from which tax-sore colonists shoved off
on the Boston Tea Party, says the paper. It notes that
British investors own half of the 59-story Pan Am Building-that rises over the tracks at New York's Grand Central
Terminal, and that the Italian Societa Generale Immobi-
liare, partly owned by the Vatican, will spend $50 million
on a hotel, apartment and office building center in Washington, D.C. On New York's Staten Island Swiss bankers
outbid Arrie'rickns, paying $15 million for undeveloped land!
The Journal tftiotes an authority as saying foreign
investment in the United States land alone has increased
1,000 per cent in the past five years
It would seem high time for a WASHINGTON Tea
Party!
A Bill Of Duties
Saturday will be Open House all day at the North
Canton branch of Citizens Savings and Loan Assn. The
grand opening climaxes a remodelingjaitid'expansion program, and makes North Canton the-second city in the
country to have a bank with the new Diebold television
drive-up.
order to maintain and fulfill the Bill of Rights, we needed
to develop a Bill of Duties.
Duty is an oldfashioned Avord — but all the modern
sophistries will not wipe it out. This country greAv up on
copy book sayings, and it readied its heights under men
who had had thoroughly dinned into them'the plain homely
virtues of loyalty, honesty and integrity, and who personally applied them to their community life.
We have vt-andered far-from, these copy hook sayings,
and have accepted out-rights as special- privileges for which
no payment was necessary. We must-go back to the Proverbs, to the simple statement of right and wrong.
"Righteousness exatteth a nation; but sin is a reproach
to any people."
"He that justificth the wicked and he that eondemneth
the just, even they both are an abomination to the Lord."
"Train up a child in the. way he should go; and when
he is old, he will not depart from it."
"Buy the truth and. sell it not; get Avisdom and instruction and understanding."
"He that hath no rule over his spirit is like a cit.v that
is broken down and Avithout Avails."
"Th'ey that forsake the law, praise the wicked, but
such as keep the laAv contend with them."
Only by setting up a Bill of Duties for ourselves can
Ave observe the spirit as Avell as the letter of the Bill of
Rights.
Hoav well do you know this charter of our liberties?
Read it over carefully and turn its clauses into inverse
ratio. Free press — free to speak the truth but not free
to make false statements. Free assembly — for free and
friendly discussion, but not to be used to overthroAV the
government. Freedom to worship — but not to keep anyone else from worshipping. And so on. Each freedom that
is given, carries Avith it its duty or restriction as it affects
each man's conduct toward his neighbor.
If we Avill but adhere conscientiously to a Bill of Duties, we need have no fear of retaining the benefits of our
Bill of Rights.
One of the high spots of the
(lay will be tho visit of Captain Penny, WIvVVS television
personality, who will autograph
saving hooks from 1 to 3 p.m.
Glyn Warstler, North Canton's
"'Miss Ohio" in lhc "Miss Universe" eonlesl, will be the honorary rc.-eiilioni.st.
Also on hand will be the entire branch .staff that has continued to serve Vorth Canlon
customers throughout tlie
months of remodolirg, including
Carl DiRienzi, branch manager.
Mayor George VV. Swindell and
other City officials also will be
present.
All persons Touring the bank
facilities br-r.vosn 9 a.m. and
3 p.m. Rnumi.Tv will receive free
souvenir giftf
For 'those adding .S5 or morn
to a savini...; account, or opening a new account for that
amount, Citizens ha? a free ticket to Wait Dir.neye jafest motion picture production, "Tn
Search of the'Castaways." slated
to open at the Palace Theater
in Canlon, Dec. 21.
Special features of tlie newly
renovated interior, in addition
to the office television, include
a suspended acoustic liie ceiling, new flooring, new teller's
counter antl three new coupon
booths for use in connection with
the safety deposit vault.
The colonial columns and
white woo;i trim have remained in front, but the front has
been- opened up with glass so
that the main banking room is
visible from the North Canton
.square. Additional white wood
division bars are -being added
as soon as' weather permits.
There is a new rear entrance
from the rear parking lot. with
a canopy which protects the
night depository.
Twenty-one cars can park in
the lot immediately behind the
diamond-shaped building, while
parking for an additional 19
cars has been provided through
construction of a second lot at
the northwest corner of 'Portage
ard Ream streets. Along with
this project, 13 1-2 feet parallel
along 'Ream St. was dedicated
to the City for widening of the
street.
Both lots are available, in off
hours, for City Hall visitors and
the general public. Concrete
curbs have been installed in both
lots for .safety and landscaped
planting strips and boxes add
a touch of green.
(Continued on Psge 3)
Service Keeps
Gsiy lowing
-Vorth Canton residents will
need a long time to thank City
officials and .street and-.water
department employes for the excellent job of snow removal during last weekend's storm. ',
Those who were able to make
it to 'North Canton on snow
laden, slippery highways, wanted io stay here, .where they
couid move about, freely—on
foot and by motor vehicle.
CrP\\-\ were first •cdle.rl out
at 7:52 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5
to alleviate slippery conditions
on the main arteries. -
At, 2 p.m., Dec. 0, The men
were out ajain—this lime io
haul away tree limbs which had
been broken by the unusually
heavy snowfall. Many l'imbs, in
their fall, blocked passage on-
main thoroughfares.
Dedicated men plowed through
mounds of snow all day Friday
ancl until supperlime Saturday,
and then had to be called out
again to haul 17 loads of snow
(Continued on Page 3)
.fia.Tij.tulO All k3X'IL JLffi. A
gives indirect lighting to the
at Citizens Savings and Loan
suspended acoustical c.eiiing
ultra-modern tellers counter
'branch on the North. Canton
Music Will Fill The Air
As Community Sings
program
The public is being in*7iL"'.l to join with school and
church choirs in a community-wide Christmas
Thursday, Dec. 20.
A North Canton Civil Defense spokesman reports a disappointing response to its Neighborhood First Aid Training
Pilot Project.
The Community Christmas
Sing, sponsored by the Hoover
Company, will be at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday around the community
Christmas tree on the Hoover
Company lawn in downtown
North Canton.
Radio Station WHBC will
broadcast the entire one-half
hour program at 7:30.
Those who wish to participate
in the program should be on
hand by 7 so that the broadcast
(Continued on Page 3)
Come See Santa
A Note of Thanks
North Canton residents were the envy of all their
neighbors during the big snow storm last weekend, not
because an invisible woof shielded the City from the snow
fall, but because around-the-clock hard work of a few men,
namely employes of the City's street and water departments and the City administration. Let's give them a smile
.and a 'Thank You' to warm their-hearts as they labor in
ihe cold in our behalf.
K of G Council 3777
Plans Christmas Party
The annual Christmas Party
of Bishop McFadden Council
3777, North Canton Knights of
Columbus, will be held Dec. 16,
at St. Paul's church hall.
Entertainment for the afternoon event will be provided toy
members of the Canton Youth
Council dance classes and the
Canton Talent Foundation.
Santa also will be present. A
Community Sing will be led 'by
Max'Prosise, chairman. Refreshments will be served.
Shop at Bazaar
Many North Canton res-
dents will be able to complete their Christmas Shopping, a week early, . this
weekend at the two-day
annual Christmas Bazaar
held by the Senior Cit-
zens.
Handcrafted gift items,
baked goods and other
novelty articles will be on
sale Friday and Saturday
at the North Canton Community Building YMCA on
S. Main St.
Doors will open at 9 a.m.
both days. Sales personnel
will remain on duty in the
CB lobby until 9 Friday
night and until '5 p.m. Saturday.
Purchasers imay treat
themselves to hot coffee
and doughnuts along with
their shopping spree.
The bazaar is one of
the major money-making
events conducted by North
Canton's Senior Citizens
organization.
Judges Are Named For
Home Lighting Cmtest
Time is drawing' short for entering the North Canton
Junior Chamber of Commerce annual Christmas Home
Lighting Contest. The deadline for entries is midnight,
Dec. 17. Judging will take place Sunday evening, Dec. 23.
Santa gives a friendly wave to Sharon Blanc as she
adjusts the Santa Sponsor sign on the Stipes Footwear door.
Stipes is one of 36 Santa Sponsors, responsible for St. Nick's
trip to North Can'ton this year. Sponsors include business-
, men, professional people and other civic-minded individuals.
Santa and his igloo will have headquarters at Hummel's
parking lot on N. Main St. through 'Saturday Of this week.
All next week and on Dec. 24, the jolly "gent" and his'ice
house will hold forth in front o'f the Harter Bank on S. Main
St.
Santa greets children and hands out candy canes from
6:30 to 8:30 weekdays and from noon until 5:30 p.m. Satur-
days. • .
Added to last week's list of 32 sponsors are-Topps .Chalet.
Restaurant arid Lounge, The Pepper Tree,'Sturm's-Appliance Service and Harry London Candies, Inc.
All residents of the North Canton School District are eligible
to compete. Entry Blanks are
available at North Canton and
Greentown business places as
well as those printed in the
North Canton Sun.
Contest chairman John E'bin-
ger has announced that the
judges will be Mrs. William
Hoag of The Jewelry Box, Mr.
Robert Zimmerman of The
North Canton Floral & 'Gift
Shoppe, and Mr. Robert Rainey
of the North Canton Little Art
Gallery.
Entries will be judged on the
basis of design and composition,
originality, color and theme.
Cash awards of $35, donated toy
the Ohio Power Company, $20,
and $10 will be presenter to the
first, second, and third place
winners respectively. In addition, an 8 x 10 color photograph of the winner's display
will accompany each cash prize.
Watch for List
The Dec. 19 Christmas issue
of the North Canton Sun will
contain a list of entries to enable the community to view
and appreciate the holiday decorating efforts of the entrants.
The 1961 contest first prize
winner was Marlin- E,. Snyder
of 812 Clearmount with second
and third place awards going
to James-McEiwen of-720Q-Cha-
tham and Carroll Gantz of 1030
Dogwood, respectively.
The committee members serving with John Ebirger are Ned
Lehman, Dan Gray, and Gary
Storch with Don Hinerman as
group advisor.
tsquare. Tne newly-remodeled interior will be open for inspection all day Saturday. Of special interest will be the
television units, inside and out.
City Hall Buzzes With
Pre - Holiday Wrap - Up
City Hall is going to be
Dec. 17. So far five meetings
evening.
The first two, at 6:30 and 7,
are public hearings on two zoning change requests.
Two recessed meetings, picking up from where they were
left off earlier this month, will
be City Council at 8 p.m. and
the North Canton Planning Commission at 7:30.
Also meeting the same eve-
a busy place come Monday,
are slated for that Monday
ning at 7:30 will be the newly-
established Mayor's Advisory
Committee on City Planning.
The fir.st public hearing wiU
be on a request to change zoning of Lot 3937 on Schneider
Rd. from Residential Area II
Class B Use to Business Area
III Class A.
The second hearing deals with
(".Continued on Page 3)
Christmas Oratorio
Walsh Students
Head for Home
After the completion of classes 'Friday, Walsh College's 301
students will begin a 20-day vacation- for the holidays.
Classes at the E!aston St. Liberal arts college will resume
Jan. 3. Less than three weeks
later, first-semester final examinations will be given Jan. 23-25.
^Freshmen will register Jan.
31 for second-semester classes.
Sophomores and juniors register
Feb. 1.
Second-semester classes will
begin 'Feb. 4.
Jackson PTA To Meet
Grades one through three will
present a play for the December meeting of the Jackson
Parent-Techer Assn.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will
be held Dec. 20 in. the grade
school auditorium.
Five vocal sonsts wil be featured in Camille Saint Saens'
"Christmas Oratorio" to be presented Sunday, Dec. 16, by the
Chancel Choir of Zion United
Church of Christ.
The program will be given at
the church at 8 p.m. and will
be open to the public.
Solo roles will be taken by
Mrs. Donald Wensel, soprano;
Mrs. Richard Cochran; mezzo
Gilpatric, alto; H. Jay Bishop,
tenor; and Richard 'Ramsey, baritone.
Harpist will be Mrs. Charles
Henschen. Charles McAnall will
provide organ accompaniement.
Conducting the choral group
will be Miss Daune Gillespie,
minister of music.
Of the many works by the
French composer, this oratorio
is one of the few well known.
"Carnival of Animals" and
'Danse Macabre" are among
his other popular compositons.
The "Christmas Oratorio,"
Opus 12. is one of Saint Saens*
HS35-19211 early works, having
been written in 1858, while the
composer .served as organist at
the Church of the Madeline,
'Paris.
The text of the oratorio, originally written in Latin, is hased!
on the Versicles of the Office
of the Day and the Midnight
(Christmas) Mass of the Roman Catholic Church. The choir
will perform an- English ver-
sion by the American poet, Nathan Dole.
Written in a pastoral style,
the oratorio tells of Christ's
birth and foreshadows the Con>
ing tragedy.,